News
Ginsburg lies in repose at Supreme Court as Roberts honors legacy
Schumer invokes “two-hour rule” to block Senate committee hearings
Watch live: Fauci and Redfield testify before Senate committee
Senate Republicans release controversial report on Hunter Biden
Cindy McCain endorses Biden
What is socialism? And what do socialists really want in 2020?
Walmart agrees to back Trump’s TikTok “education fund”
Poisoned Russian opposition leader released from hospital
380 whales dead in mass stranding in Australia
2020 Elections
CBS News coverage of the 2020 elections
Battleground Tracker: Latest polls, state of the race and more
5 things to know about CBS News’ 2020 Battleground Tracker
CBS News coverage of voting rights issues
How do I vote in my state in the 2020 election?
Battleground Tracker: Biden gains edge in Arizona, leads big in Minnesota
With more mail-in ballots, officials urge patience on election night
Americans and the right to vote: Why it’s not easy for everyone
Why some mail-in ballots are rejected and how to make sure your vote counts
What happens if the president doesn’t accept the election results?
Election Day could turn into “Election Week” with rise in mail ballots
Shows
Live
LIVE
More
Search
Live
Watch CBSN Live
Moscow — Russia on Tuesday arrested a Siberian cult leader who claims to be the reincarnation of Jesus, along with his top aides, in an operation involving armed troops and aircraft. The Investigative Committee, which probes serious crimes, said it had detained Sergei Torop known to his followers as Vissarion the Teacher, or the Jesus of Siberia, and two of his aides.
Footage released by investigators showed 59-year-old Vissarion, with long grey hair and a beard, and two other men being led by masked commandos from a van and boarding a helicopter.
Russian security forces are seen during the operation to detain the leader of the “Church of the Last Testament” cult, including prominent mystic Sergei Torop also known as Vissarion, (seen at right) in Krasnoyarsk, Russia, in a photograph released by Russia’s Investigative Committee, September 22, 2020.
Investigative Committee of Russia/Handout/REUTERS
The operation in a remote settlement in Siberia’s Krasnoyarsk region included members of the FSB security service and other law enforcement agencies.
Torop, a former traffic police officer, has said he experienced an “awakening” when he lost his job in 1989 as the atheist Communist regime was fast unravelling.
In 1991, he founded what is now the Church of the Last Testament.
“Vissarion the Teacher,” or “Jesus of Siberia,” Russian ex-traffic cop Sergei Torop meets followers in the remote village of Petropavlovka, in Russia’s Siberia region, August 18, 2009.
ALEXANDER NEMENOV/AFP/Getty
Several thousand members of Vissarion’s cult live in remote hamlets in Siberia.
One follower, Alexander Staroverov, posted several videos on Facebook showing army helicopters and vehicles parked in a field.
Investigators said the self-proclaimed messiah and his aides solicited funds from disciples and emotionally abused them.
Cult leader Vissarion, who has proclaimed himself a new Christ, conducts a service during the “Holiday of Good Fruit” feast in the village of Obitel Rassveta (Cloister of Sunrise), some 398 miles southeast of Russia’s Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk, in an August 18, 2010 file photo.
Ilya Naymushin/REUTERS
The Investigative Committee said it was planning to charge the cult leaders with organizing an illegal religious organization and causing “two or more people severe harm.”
Asked by AFP how he knew he was the son of God, Vissarion said in 2009: “I felt something violently surging up from within me that had been held down until then.”
His followers adhere to a jumble of creeds that draw from Russian Orthodox rites and environmentally friendly values.
An elderly woman places a candle under a picture of “Vissarion the Teacher,” or “Jesus of Siberia,” Russian ex-traffic cop Sergei Torop at a church in the remote village of Petropavlovka, in Russia’s Siberia region, August 17, 2009.
ALEXANDER NEMENOV/AFP/Getty
Converts included musicians, doctors, teachers, Red Army colonels, an ex-minister of Belarus and pilgrims from Cuba, Bulgaria, Belgium, Australia and Germany.
In the 1990s, some of Vissarion’s devotees died either by suicide or as a result of harsh living conditions and lack of medical care.
Be in the know. Get the latest breaking news delivered straight to your inbox.
View CBS News In
CBS News App
Safari